Eggplant is a vegetable that rewards confidence. Cook it timidly and it's spongy; push it — hot grill, enough oil, salt, patience — and you end up with creamy, smoky slabs that taste like summer. A herb oil at the end is the flourish that ties it to whatever else is on the table: grilled meats, a cold glass of rosé, a piece of bread for mopping up.
Grilled eggplant with herbs
Thick eggplant slabs grilled until tender and smoky, finished with a bright garlic-herb oil — a summer side that turns skeptics into fans.

- Prep
- 10 min
- Cook
- 10 min
- Total
- 40 min
- Serves
- 4
Grilled eggplant with herbs
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (13)
Garlic-herb oil
To finish
You'll need
- Grill (gas, charcoal, or grill pan)
- Tongs
- Large platter
- Paper towels
- Small bowl (for herb oil)
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 1 cup)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Italian globe — the standard; large, meaty, ideal for slabs
- Rosa Bianca — heirloom variety with creamy, less-bitter flesh
- Japanese (long, slender) — sweeter and thinner-skinned; slice lengthwise
- Fairy Tale — small striped eggplants; halve lengthwise for appetizers
- Graffiti (striped purple-and-white) — sweet and decorative; swap 1-for-1
Ripeness
Skin should be taut, shiny, and snap back when pressed. A dull skin or a thumb indent that lingers means it's overripe and will be seedy and bitter. Heavy for size = dense flesh; light = spongy and hollow.
Imperfections are fine
Small blemishes or scars on the skin are fine. A slightly curved or irregular shape doesn't affect taste. The stem should be green and fresh — brown or dry stems indicate it's been sitting.
Good substitutions
- Zucchini — grills in 3 minutes per side; same herb oil
- Portobello mushroom caps — grill 4 minutes per side
- Yellow summer squash — same technique as zucchini
- Thick tomato slabs — grill briefly, 90 seconds per side, with the same herb oil
In season
US eggplant peaks July through September. Out-of-season eggplant is often bitter and seedy — skip it and make this recipe in summer.
How much to buy
About 1 1/2 lb — 2 medium Italian eggplants or 4 Japanese eggplants.
Find your eggplant grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season July – September
- For this recipe 1 1/2 lb / 2 medium eggplants
- Freshness Picked within this week
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegan · gluten-free · dairy-free
- While you're there Fresh tomatoes · Basil and parsley · Garlic · Summer squash and zucchini · Fresh mozzarella or feta from a local dairy
At the market
About 1 1/2 lb — 2 medium Italian eggplants or 4 Japanese eggplants.
Best varieties
- Italian globe the standard; large, meaty, ideal for slabs
- Rosa Bianca heirloom variety with creamy, less-bitter flesh
- Japanese (long, slender) sweeter and thinner-skinned; slice lengthwise
Good to know
Tips
- Don't skip the salting step. It's worth the 20 minutes — the texture difference is real.
- Eggplant absorbs oil dramatically on the first brush. Expect to use more than you'd think — it's the vehicle for flavor into the flesh.
- Room-temperature eggplant tastes better than cold. Pull from the fridge an hour before grilling.
- A splash of balsamic over the platter at the end adds sweetness — especially nice with grilled meats.
- Leftover grilled eggplant is the base for a killer sandwich: layer with mozzarella, tomato, and basil on crusty bread.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 3 days in an airtight container with the herb oil. Texture actually improves overnight.
- Raw eggplant: 5 to 7 days refrigerated in the crisper drawer — best used within a week of purchase.
- Freezer: not recommended; texture turns watery.
Reheating
- Skillet: 2 minutes per side over medium heat.
- Oven: 375°F (190°C) for 5 minutes.
- Room temperature: leftover eggplant is great cold or at room temp — skip reheating entirely.
- Grill: 1 minute per side if you're already firing it up.
Make ahead
- Salt and slice the eggplant up to 6 hours ahead; hold in the fridge until grilling.
- Make the herb oil up to 3 days ahead — the flavors deepen.
- Grill up to 24 hours ahead, dress, and refrigerate. Bring to room temperature before serving.
Variations
- Balsamic-glazed: finish with 1 tablespoon balsamic glaze over the platter.
- Eggplant caprese: layer grilled slices with fresh mozzarella, tomato, and basil; drizzle with balsamic.
- Grilled eggplant rolls: roll warm eggplant slices around a tablespoon of seasoned ricotta and a fresh basil leaf.
- Smoky harissa eggplant: swap herb oil for a mix of 2 tablespoons harissa + 2 tablespoons olive oil; finish with yogurt and cilantro.
- Eggplant parm on the grill: grill the eggplant, then layer with marinara and mozzarella and finish under the broiler.
- Grilled eggplant baba ganoush: grill until blackened and soft, then mash with tahini, lemon, garlic, and olive oil.
Swaps
- No grill: use a grill pan on the stovetop, or broil 3 inches from the element for 4 minutes per side.
- Herb swap: dill + mint for a brighter Middle Eastern lean; all parsley for a classic Italian finish.
- Oil-free: brush with vegetable broth or water instead of oil — texture is softer but works for low-fat diets.
- No lemon: swap for 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar in the herb oil.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to salt eggplant before cooking?
Why does grilled eggplant get soggy?
What's the best eggplant for grilling?
Can I grill eggplant without a grill?
How thick should eggplant slices be for grilling?
Can I make grilled eggplant ahead?
What can I serve with grilled eggplant?
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